Higginson A D, Ruxton G D
Division of Ecology & Evolutionary Biology, Faculty of Biomedical & Life Sciences, University of Glasgow, Glasgow G12 8QQ, UK.
Oecologia. 2009 May;160(2):399-410. doi: 10.1007/s00442-009-1296-y. Epub 2009 Feb 28.
Chemical defences against predation often involve responses to specific predation events where the prey expels fluids, such as haemolymph or gut contents, which are aversive to the predator. The common link is that each predation attempt that is averted results in an energetic cost and a reduction in the chemical defences of the prey, which might leave the prey vulnerable if the next predation attempt occurs soon afterwards. Since prey appear to be able to control the magnitude of their responses, we should expect them to trade-off the need to repel the current threat against the need to preserve defences against future threats and conserve energy for other essential activities. Here we use dynamic state-dependent models to predict optimal strategies of defence deployment in the juvenile stage of an animal that has to survive to maturation. We explore the importance of resource level, predator density, and the costs of making defences on the magnitude of the responses and optimal age and size at maturation. We predict the patterns of investment and the magnitude of the deployment of defences to potentially multiple attacks over the juvenile period, and show that responses should be smaller when the costs of defences and/or predation risk are higher. The model enables us to predict that animals in which defences benefit the adult stage will employ different strategies than those that do not use the same defences as adults, and thereby experience a smaller reduction in body size as a result of repeated attacks. We also explore the effect of the importance of adult size, and find that the sex and mating system of the prey should also affect defensive strategies. Our work provides the first predictive theory of the adaptive use of responsive defences across taxa.
针对捕食的化学防御通常涉及对特定捕食事件的反应,即猎物排出对捕食者具有厌恶作用的液体,如血淋巴或肠道内容物。共同的联系是,每一次避免的捕食尝试都会带来能量消耗,并降低猎物的化学防御能力,如果紧接着发生下一次捕食尝试,这可能会使猎物变得脆弱。由于猎物似乎能够控制其反应的程度,我们应该预期它们会在击退当前威胁的需求与保留对未来威胁的防御以及为其他重要活动节省能量的需求之间进行权衡。在这里,我们使用动态状态依赖模型来预测一种必须存活到成熟阶段的动物幼年期防御部署的最优策略。我们探讨了资源水平、捕食者密度以及制造防御的成本对反应程度以及成熟时的最优年龄和大小的重要性。我们预测了幼年期针对潜在多次攻击的防御投资模式和部署程度,并表明当防御成本和/或捕食风险较高时,反应应该较小。该模型使我们能够预测,防御对成年阶段有益的动物将采用与成年后不使用相同防御的动物不同的策略,因此由于反复攻击,其体型减小幅度较小。我们还探讨了成年体型重要性的影响,并发现猎物的性别和交配系统也应该影响防御策略。我们的工作提供了第一个关于跨分类群适应性使用反应性防御的预测理论。